Interpublic Could Be Linked To Litigation Over Media Rebates On $47 Million Haribo Account In Germany

An arcane accounting dispute between Gummi Bears maker Haribo and its German ad agency could turn into a headache for Interpublic Group, the giant U.S. holding company that owns venerable ad agencies such as McCann, Deutsch and DraftFCB.

Interpublic told Business Insider it has nothing to do with the dispute.

Haribo is a MediaPlus client. We do not manage nor do we have any economic benefit in that agency/client relationship. IPG does not have any outstanding issues in the German market as relates to media discounts. And even less so for a client and an agency that are not ours.

However, the ruling — which is redacted in parts to conceal some company names — also cites Interpublic's German agency buying group in addition to Haribo's principle ad buying agency, Mediaplus.

The order requires that any information on money owed to Haribo from German media companies be turned over by Mediaplus. But the order also requires Mediaplus to turn over information it has about rebates and volume discounts received by "MagnaGlobalMediaplus," the joint buying group formed between Interpublic's Magna unit and Mediaplus in 2004.

To be clear, the ruling does not accuse Magna or Interpublic of keeping money from Haribo.

Although the dispute sounds arcane, it raises the specter of an old ghost that has haunted Interpublic for years.

The 2004 scandal forced Interpublic to repeatedly restate its accounts, led to the demotion of Interpublic's former CEO, John J. Dooner Jr., and his replacement by the current CEO, Michael Roth.

Media discounts and rebates are controversial in the advertising business, and most clients' contracts with their agencies forbid them, particularly in the U.S. Here is how they work: If an advertiser spends $50 million a year on ads, a TV channel may return a percentage of that money as a goodwill discount or rebate on the large volume of business being done, to encourage the buyer to come back next year. Those rebates are sent to advertisers' buying agencies. But it is the client's money that has earned them, and smart clients insist that all rebates be returned to them or added as credit to their future spending. Agencies in Europe have long maneuvered to keep the discounts for themselves, to improve their margins. Critics regard rebates and discounts as akin to kickbacks; in the early 2000s several New York ad execs went to federal prison for diverting rebates from their clients.

In the Haribo litigation, the candymaker is alleging that Mediaplus tried to keep the money and/or media credit for itself. Mediaplus has denied the claims.

At first glance, the ruling appears to apply mainly to Mediaplus. It has been partially redacted by the court to preserve the privacy of the litigants. But on several pages of the ruling the judge refers to a company with the initials "MGMP," and certain redactions appear to be censoring the words "MagnaGlobalMediaplus."

A source in Germany tells Business Insider that MagnaGlobalMediaplus is indeed the company referred to in the ruling. Two separate translations of the ruling prepared for Business Insider also confirm that MagnaGlobalMediaplus is referred to repeatedly. We also received copies of the annual reports for Magna Global Germany and MagnaGlobalMediaplus, and those reports both confirm that Magna owns 51% of MGMP.